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What it means to be savedFR. LEONARD M. PUECH, O.F.M.Someone asked me recently whether it was possible to know if one were saved. To understand the question, you must remember the two-fold meaning of the expression, "to be saved."
Someone asked me recently whether it was possible to know if one were saved.
To understand the question, you must remember the two-fold meaning of the expression,
"to be saved." Normally, it means to have escaped hell and to have been admitted
to heaven. At times, however, it expressed the belief that if you have obtained
the forgiveness of your sins and are justified, you are thereby infallibly saved.
Thus, if you could be sure that you were justified, you would be absolutely certain
of your future salvation. To be justified and to be saved are practically the
same, even if full salvation is yet to come. This was obviously the meaning of
the question i.e., could one be certain of being in such a state, according
to God's sight, and hence certain of eternal salvation. To give an answer it
is necessary to examine two questions: (1) is it possible to be certain that your
sins are forgiven and that you are justified; and (2) is there an infallible link
between justification and final salvation? The 16th century Reformers insisted
that for anyone to be justified and forgiven for his sins, he had to believe firmly
and without any doubt that through the merits of Christ, he was forgiven and justified.
The Council of Trent rejected this kind of faith as a vain confidence and defined
that, if no man may doubt God's mercy, or the merits of Christ and the efficacy
of the sacraments, on the other hand no one, if he considered his weakness and
lack of dispositions, could be certain with the infallible certainty of faith,
that he possessed God's grace. The clause excluding the infallible certainty
of faith, hammered out and introduced in the Council's decree after long discussions
between theologians of different schools, leaves room for a certain assurance,
excluding prudent doubt, that one is justified. One might be certain through
a special revelation from God that all his sins are forgiven, as we read in the
gospel (Lk. 5,20; 7,48) and in the lives of a few saints, although even then there
might be room for illusion. Even apart from such a divine guarantee, one may conclude,
both from what one feels and from what one does, that he is pleasing to God, without
ever being absolutely sure that it is all inspired by the Holy Spirit. Since
we are to judge the tree by its fruit (Mt. 7,15-20), the surest signs that God's
grace and the Holy Spirit abide in us, are the fruits they produce in the soul:
"The fruit of the Spirit is: charity, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faith, modesty, continency" (Gal. 5,22-23). The greatest sign is fraternal
charity, because it is the great commandment of Jesus and the proof we are his
disciples (Jo. 13, 34-35), so that, "if we love one another, God abides in us
and his love is perfected in us" (1 Jo. 4,12) and then, "we know we have passed
from death to life" (1 Jo. 3,14). The surest sign of all is love of enemies
charity at its highest, because it is beyond purely human strength and
cannot be inspired by natural motives, much less by the devil. Even then, although
one has the best proof there is, that you are justified, that your sins are forgiven
and that you possess God's grace, you are not saved yet. You will only be saved
when you enter heaven, because as long as you live you may commit sin, lose God's
grace, and incur damnation. One might say that to be justified is the same as
to be saved, since one who is justified, and dies in that state, goes to heaven;
and since grace is the beginning of that possession of God, which constitutes
heaven. Nevertheless, it would create an ambiguity, since to be saved means
normally to be completely safe from eternal punishment. Only if it were impossible
to lose grace after being justified, could it be said that to be justified is
to be saved. Justification is only the beginning of salvation. Else why the warning
of Jesus: "He who perseveres until the end will be saved" (Mt. 10,22; 24,13).
Some begin well, he told us in the parable of the sower, and receive the word
of God with joy, but when they have to face trials or temptations, they fall away
(Mt. 13,20-21). If one could be so assured of final salvation, why all the
exhortations of Jesus to be vigilant so as not to enter into temptation, for the
spirit is eager, but the flesh is weak (Mt. 26,46)? Why warn us to be ready to
receive the master when he comes, not to do as the foolish virgins did? Why did
St. Peter put the faithful on their guard: "Be sober and watchful, because your
adversary the devil, like a roaring lion, goes about seeking someone to devour"
(1 Pet. 5,8)? Omitting the many exhortations of St. Paul to the believers to
stand firm, as when he insists that Ephesians arm themselves spiritually for the
war we must wage against powerful and evil spirits (Eph. 6,11-13), why does he
remind the Corinthians, who had experienced so abundantly, it seems, the gifts
of the Holy Spirit that the Hebrews also, coming out of Egypt, had had wonderful
experiences and received wonderful gifts: "Yet with most of them God was not well
pleased" (1 Cor. 10,5)? If they were already saved, since they believed, why
does he warn them: "Therefore let him who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall"
(1 Cor. 10, 12)? If ever a man could be certain that he was saved was it not St.
Paul, after all the visions and revelations he had had from the Lord, to the point
of being rapt up into paradise and hearing secrets that man cannot repeat (2 Cor.
12,1-4)? Why then did he feel the need to chastise his body and bring it into
subjection, "lest perhaps after preaching to others I myself should be rejected"
(1 Cor. 9,26-27)? Although we must work out our salvation with fear and trembling
(Phil. 2,12), we may have a firm hope "that he who has begun a good work in us,
will bring it to perfection" (Phil. 1,6), because "God is faithful and will not
permit us to be tempted beyond our strength" and will enable us to bear it (1
Cor. 10, 13). Nevertheless we cannot be absolutely certain of the final outcome,
or even of our present stand: we cannot be completely assured of being justified.
St. Paul himself would not judge himself: "For I have nothing on my conscience,
yet I am not thereby justified; he who judges me is the Lord" (1 Cor. 4,4). Coming
back to our initial question: it is impossible to know with absolute certainty
that one is saved. We are here considering salvation in its final outcome
that is, to be counted among the elect in heaven or in its beginning, which
is to be forgiven and justified. We may, however, have a solid assurance that
our sins are forgiven and that we are in the state of grace. Although we must
always "strive more by good works to make our vocation and calling sure" (2 Pet.
1, 10) on account of the possibility of sin, we have solid grounds for believing
in our final salvation, since God wants all men to be saved (1 Tim. 2,4) and wants
to complete the work he has begun in us (Phil. 1, 6). One might object that
Saint Paul teaches that man is justified by faith alone, independently of good
works. Since it is possible to be certain that one believes, it is therefore possible
to be certain that one is saved. We must first remark that Saint Paul did not
write that man is justified by faith alone; the word, alein alone,
was added by Luther in his German translation of Rom. 3,28. It is true that faith
is the cause of justification, but it is necessarily accompanied by other acts
a regret of the past, for example, and a total surrender to God's will
for the future (see Acts 2,27-38). Besides, we must take into account what
kind of works Saint Paul rejects and who were the adversaries he had in mind:
"Man is justified by faith independently of the works of the Law" (Rom 3,28).
His aim was to reject the need of keeping the Mosaic Law to be justified, as
some Christian Jews claimed and tried to force upon the Gentiles coming to the
faith, as we know from the: Acts of the Apostles and the Letter to the Galatians.
In fact he goes much further and denies the possibility of becoming just by observing
the Law, because one would be just by one's own doing and not by God's grace,
and could boast of his justice, like the Pharisee of the parable (Lk. 18,9-14).
When Saint Paul says that man is justified by faith, he means that it is not
what a man does that makes him pleasing to God, but the faith in all his words,
which are all words of love. The Reformers were right in their insistence that
justification comes form faith, but wrong when they added, "from faith alone."
In fact, faith is only the root. The Council of Trent gave the true description
of the complete process of justification in adults: "They dispose themselves to
justification, when, moved and helped by divine grace, they conceive faith through
hearing (Rom. 10, 17), draw freely toward God, believe as true all he has revealed
and promised, chiefly that the sinner is justified by God's grace 'through the
redemption, which is in Christ Jesus' (Rom. 3,24); when, realizing that they are
sinners, from the fear of divine justice (which strikes them usefully) they turn
to the consideration of God's mercy, rise to hope that God will be favorable to
them on account of Christ, begin to love him as the source of all justice, and
as a consequence are moved to a certain hate and detestation of their sins, namely
through the penance necessary before baptism; and finally when they decide to
receive baptism, to begin a new life and to keep God's commandments." Besides,
the Council of Trent explained what it is to be justified. It is something much
more wonderful than just to be forgiven without being changed in any way. It is
much more than God throwing the mantle of Christ's merits over our corruption,
which remains the same, as the Reformers described it. Justification brings
a real sanctification and interior renewal through grace and the gifts of the
Holy Spirit. It means much more than to be considered just; it is to be called
and to be just in reality through that justice of God, who gives to each as he
pleases (1 Cor. 12, 11), and by each one's co-operation. Thus through the merits
of Christ's passion, the love of God is poured into our hearts through the Holy
Spirit and becomes inherent there, so that at the same time that his sins are
forgiven, one receives faith, hope and charity. They are that best robe given
to the prodigal son upon his return home (Lk. 15,22), the "wedding garment" to
be kept unsoiled in order to be admitted to the wedding feast of the Lamb. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Fr. Leonard M. Puech, O.F.M. "What it means to be saved." In Spiritual
Guidance (Vancouver, B.C.: Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice and Liberty,
1983), 22-27. Republished with permission of the Vancouver Foundation of Art,
Justice and Liberty. THE AUTHOR The
late Fr. Leonard M. Puech wrote a popular column for the B.C. Catholic
from 1976 to 1982. Those columns were compiled and published by the Vancouver
Foundation of Art, Justice, and Liberty as the book Spiritual Guidance
in 1983. The VFAJL is interested in reprinting Spiritual Guidance. Anyone
who would like to contribute to this worthy cause please write: Dr. Margherita
Oberti, 1170 Eyremount Drive, West Vancouver, B.C. V7S 2C5. Copyright © 1983
Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice, & Liberty
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